Page 8-Friday, February 12, 1982-The Michigan Daily U:M Department of Theatre and Drama eme Your Life A play by William Saroyan wit h Radio Free Ann Arbor WCBN's Third Annual On-The-Air Fundraiser began yesterday. The student-run non-commercial radio station is in dire need of funds due to shrinking budget allocations. The fundraisergis a necessary part of keeping the station operating at current levels. Replacement and improvement of broadcasting and recording equipment is one of the station's major projects for 1982. 'Thomas D. Mahard as Kit Carson POWER CENTER Feb. 10-13, 8p.m., Feb. 14, 2p.m. Tickets at PT P in the Michigan League, 764-0450 I I m suaders, The Urbations, Trainable, and Mike Gould and the Gene Pool Band. The Bash, which will be held from 8 p.m. to 1 a.m. at the Michigan Union Ballroom, will include a cash bar. Listeners pledging $4 or more will be admitted free, and it will also be possible to pay at the door. And for those who prefer to stay home Sun- day night, WCBN plans on broad- casting the Bash live, in stereo. Theater William Saroyan's Pulitzer Prize winning play, The Time of Your Life, is running through the weekend. See the review on page seven. For more information, call 764-0450. Quiet Revolutions Theatre University senior Loren Hecht's original drama, Jelly-Filled. . . A Portrait of a Paranoia, plays at the Canterbury Loft (332 S. State) Friday and Saturday night at 8 p.m. Hecht and Judy Milstein star in this multi-form look at a very unusual young woman. -compiled by Michael Huget and Ben Ticho. 'Love' doesn't cover emotions A NEW SERVICE FROM DOWNTOWN 665-3231 or 665-3214 21142US Mon-Thurs 5 pm-1 am Fri-Sat 5 pm-2 am Sun 2 pm-midnight Many unique shows are planned for the 88.3 hour (Get it? WCBN, 88.3 FM, 88.3 hours of fundraising.) Fun- draiser, which concludes Sunday night. Live music, rare recordings, special guests and other entertain- ment will be included. The highlight of the weekend should be the Benefit Bash to thank all who contributed to the station. Many area bands will be perfor- ming, including The Blue Front Per- FREE & FAST DELIVERY NOW DELIVERING PIZZA-SUBS- DINNERS-ASSORTED SANDWICHES BEER AVAILABLE FOR DELIVERY with food purchase only free delivery with minimum food order of $5.00 m...- .................--..-.-..- --- -- --------- mCOUPON COUPON $1.25OFF I $1.00Off Any Large Pizza The Purchase of I I With One orThe Purche of I S More Items 2 Sus Expires March 30, 1982 Expires March 30, 1982 . I Only one coupon per order Only one coupon per order I ----------- -.. Alternatives to bars Lire. -u k I Is (Continued from Page 7) touring-Monsters, State, Ragnar Kvaran, to name a few-we've created The StateHouse to keep the community informed of the footnotes of pop history in the making. It's something for the students to write home about." Yet, The StateHouse does not want to remain an exclusive R'N'R club. "Not only do we want to hit the front lines R'N'R, but we're battling the cause of unexposed dancers, film-makers, and other local artists to survive," Tendler continued. "We're seeking out that talented, struggling student or com- munity artist who may give up before he makes that great movie beacuse he has nowhere to show it." Community support is the StateHouse's lifeline, because none is yet backing it up. The venture has gained great sustenance from the rock scene and various other volunteers. Fun Productions, the structural backbone of StateHouse, is calling on Ann Arbor's resources, skills, and finances to help paint, build furniture, set up sink and lights, distribute posters, and decorate. They encourage the public to attend their brainstorming meetings. To offset their money woes-they barely break even-the owners are utilizing their colossal, wooden stage and fine house P.A. system for bands to rehearse to the tune of $15 an hour. Orin Buck, graphic artist and bassist for Sewers of Paris, is setting up a classic art gallery paying homage to their 18- foot ceilings and seemingly endless wallspace: Buck is seeking Ann Arbor artists who wish to exhibit. Another enterprise is tapping the current video Music TV craze, taping bands at the place. The Cult Heroes, recently taped by Monsters drummer John Crawford, now have a prospect of appearing on MTV. Battling '80s economics and the tumultuous weekend weather scene has not stopped the StateHouse from drawing crowds of 50-200 per show. "With all ages admitted, everyone's staying cool, with no city complaints," Tendler said. Tendler also wants to expand the musical fare to Detroit and out-of-state bands. He is presently connecting with Detroit blues bands, such as Mitch Ryder, L.A. Dead Kennedys, and Boston's Mission of Burma. The weekend shows will celebrate the Cult Heroes' single, which can be heard on the airwaves from Cincinnati to Atlanta. The Heroes will join forces tonight with Detroit Dead 80s and Ann Arbor's Service band. Saturday night's show will feature Dead 80s, Sewers of Paris, and Nonfiction. The StateHouse will open its doors both nights at 8 p.m. Bands will start perorming at 9 p.m. Admission is $3.50 Friday and $2.50 Saturday. By Richard Campbell H OLLYWOOD COMES out of the closet with the release of Making Love, a romance of a different sort, starring Michael Ontkean, Kate Jackson, and Harry Hamlin. The dif- ference is that instead of the two men fighting over the woman, one of the men makes a choice between man and woman. Perhaps not so surprisingly, you would be hard pressed to find a more inoffensive, quiet movie about such a potentially controversial subject. There may have been films made before this that dealt with a similar topic, but none could deal so passively with homosexuality as Making Love. The film opens innocently enough as we watch Ontkean and Jackson move out of their apartment into a new house. Ontkean is a doctor with a growing practice in Southern California, and Jackson is a rising TV executive. What more could any husband and wife want? - . Well, it seems that Ontkean has been having certain desires that just aren't getting fulfilled in the old-fashioned in- stitute of heterosexual marriage. He visits a gay bar, eyes the occasional male passer-by, and generally gets to thinking about the other side of the coin. Enter Hamlin, a gay writer living alone, who becomes a patient under On- tkean's care and is there when On- tkean needs to talk to a sympathetic male about his feelings. How these feelings are handled in the5 film is problem number one. Ontkean is never developed into a strong charac- ter. We simply see him as a successful person with a good marriage, who sud- denly drops into the local gay bar. If somehow we could learn a little bit more about his background, his sudden actions would be better understood. - We shouldn't be shown the 'cause' of his homosexuality. But more should; have been written about his character just for the sake of plot development. Some information on Ontkean's life during his seven-year marriage, and even before that, could have greatly helped the believability of the story. Problem number two has to do with a basic decision of the writer Barry San- dler. He set out to tell a very positive story, to break down the traditional romantic notions of love that have been ingrained in our consciousness, par- tially through the help of movies. But he has supplanted the simplistic, romantic ideas with an even more simplistic idealism that makes the natural style of the film improbable. Kate Jackson n At the end of the movie (and to make this point I'm going to have to reveal the not too surprising ending), Jackson and Ontkean are doing just fine. It ap- parently was no big deal to chance your sexual persuasion in mid-stream, or to have lost your husband to another man. Sandler told me, "The ending is very impprtant to the statement I wanted to make." To be sure, it is a very positive view of the situation. But in creating such a positive angle, a certain amount of verisimilitude is destroyed. Arthur Hiller, the director, has again handled a simple story with tact and patience. In spite of the constraints of the script, he handles the delicate sub- ject matter, well . . , delicately. San- dIer's script includes individual monologues spoken straight into the camera and voice-overs to put you into the minds of these emotionally torn apart people-except the insights aren't that gut-wrenching. The best scenes in the movie are the ones which show Jackson and Ontkean as he is leading up to telling her what is going on. She knows that something is wrong, but he sits quietly, staring ab- sently, deep in thought. Ontkean's final explanation Ito Jackson was a very difficult scene-to shoot. He said, "We just couldn't get that. We went back on four different oc- cassions to get it right." Jackson said, "There were so many choices...there was no end to what a person could feel:' However, the script just doesn't ex- plore these feelings to any depth. The audience is left thinking, for the most part, just what did we watch for the past two hours? Hiller's direction is so competent that you won't really notice the absence of emotion in Making Love. ty office or lab li'l it 198: LIVE ENTERTAINMENT FEATURING GARY PRYKA and THE SCALES $1.00 Cover Charge-8:30 P.M. DRINK SPECIALS Don't Miss The TACO TABLE at The University Club on MONDAYS Between 11:30 and 1:30 ALL YOU CAN EAT FOR $2.95 The University Club Michigan Union IT'S HERE FOR YOU! U, .., Classic Film Theatre presents a Cult Classic Double Feature Fri. & Sat. Feb. 12, 13 THE KING OF HEARTS-3:00,7:00, 11:00 A THOUSAND CLOWNS-5:00, 9:00 Admission $2.00 Children $1.00 No Extra Charge for Double Feature MICHIGAN THEATRE 603 E. Liberty 662-8848 668-8480 What magnificent sound is that from the Versailles Chamber Orchestra! -Belgimm "K,-- - Versailles Chamber Orchestra Aubert: Suite of Symphonies Rameau: Concerto No. 1 Bach: Violin Concerto in E major Mozart: Divertimento in C, K. 157 Roussel: Sinfonietta Thursday Feb18 at 830 Rackham Auditorium Tickets at $550. $7.00 .$8.O5 Fl~ip'emn1off. fE 3- SAVES ENERGY and MONEY. ----- mmmmmmmmmm 3m 1 DON'T FORGET I 1 to place your ad In11 1 summer 1 ublet J 1 u ppl emen t 1 Name____ 3 Address I 1 Phone ___ 1g 1 Cost only $12 before 5:00 pm onI 1 February 22, 1982 1 ($14 from Feb. 23to March 19) 3 1 Absolutely No Ads Will ReAcemnteI Lights on in an el